Creators should LOVE Ai. AI doesn’t make uncreative people creative. It allows creators to become exponentially more creative.
Creative iteration that used to take hours , days or weeks, can happen in minutes.
The different routes you wanted to take but didn’t have the money or skill to do. Now you can do.
The number of gatekeepers drops every day and will eventually hit zero.
If you know how to tell a great story, you will LOVE AI.
99 % of content fails. With AI the cost and time it takes to experience and learn from those failures drop like a rock.
The people who should HATE AI are those that try to control distribution and the creative process because they are the ones that control platforms and tools.
It’s all going to change. Only this time it won’t take decades like it did with streaming.
I am horrified by @FedEx's commercial portraying a driver who killed a rattlesnake while delivering a package as a hero. I have written a letter to FedEx marketing officials and hope that you will do so as well, and will share this post to get more people involved. 1/4
Don’t miss your chance to win an exclusive two-day field herping adventure for two! Join Ben Stegenga and Noah Fields from @NKFherping as they guide you in finding some of the most fascinating animals in the Southeast.
Our 2024 #GivingTuesday Raffle begins!
We’re thrilled to team up with Noah Fields of @NKFherping once again! Follow us this week & watch Noah and Ben in the field as they highlight our raffle. Get your tickets, the chance to win, and support #conservation: https://t.co/GHV7qakYTu
@Nv_pyromelana I think they’re considered locally abundant, but I could see them being easily overlooked without using cover. I found this one and several more under concrete chunks near water. During extended dry and hot periods they become almost impossible to find though.
A trio of handsome adult Black Ratsnakes I moved out of the road the other day. Late spring and early summer is when you’re most likely to see snakes and turtles on the road in Georgia, so keep your eyes peeled!
An interesting observation from late winter. This stretch of river floodplain is particularly prone to produce Rough Green Snakes during periods of mild weather. This one was coincidentally (or not?) sharing a tire with a clutch of (Opheodrys-sized) eggs from last year.